Hermione Baddeley, whose talents brought her both plaudits and productions from such playwrights as George Bernard Shaw and Tennessee Williams, died Tuesday.
Does the news that Pepsi-Cola is going to use Geraldine Ferraro in their ads mean that they are looking for customers only in Minnesota, which was the only state that voted for her and her presidential running mate?
Jetta Goudal, the tall, regal French stage actress who became a popular screen siren in the heyday
Georgia Fifield, a radio actress best remembered for her roles in three programs that originated in
British film star Dawn Addams, whose relatively undistinguished career was highlighted by a leading role opposite Charlie Chaplin and as "the other woman" in the then-morally questionable "The Moon Is Blue," died of cancer in London on Tuesday, her agent told Reuters news service.
Kinuyo Tanaka (1910-1977) was one of the greatest actresses to ever face a camera.
Veteran actress Sylvia Meredith, whose career spanned 67 years years and extended from Broadway to
Simone Signoret, one of the great actresses of the French cinema and a writer of note in her last years, died Monday of cancer at her country home in Normandy at the age of 64.
Una Merkel, whose physical resemblance to Lillian Gish enabled her to embark on a dramatic career and whose talent kept her firmly at the thick of the productive actors who dominated Hollywood throughout the film industry's fabled years, died Thursday.
Two things were uppermost in Polish actress Maja Komorowska's mind as she sat in a Chateau Marmont suite ready to be interviewed.
Helen Mack, a child actress in silent films who grew up to play leading ladies in a string of
Lurene Tuttle, a character actress and drama coach whose six-decade career included every dramatic
Irish actress Siobhan McKenna, acclaimed for the roles of tragic heroines she performed during a
"PLAY WITH THE BOYS." Exude. Rah! Rah!/Greenworld.
College students who harbor dreams of a career in the broadcast and entertainment fields are apt to follow a tried-and-true path.
"I've always thought of myself as an actress," Lily Tomlin said.
Joan Shawlee, who portrayed a series of often bawdy and usually zany characters in some of film's most memorable comedies of the 1940s and '50s, including Sweet Sue, the leader of the all-girl band infiltrated by Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis in "Some Like It Hot," is dead.
"I don't have to deal with typecasting," declared esteemed character actress Judith Ivey.
Joan Greenwood, husky-voiced star of British film classics of the 1940s, has died at her London home, her son said Monday.
Funeral arrangements were pending Wednesday for Woodland Hills actress Jacqueline Joy O'Brien, who